Massachusetts
Hacky sack is suddenly cool again – The Boston Globe
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Last Friday, my week in hacky sack mania ended just as abruptly as it began, in the office of the orthopedic surgeon who had replaced my left hip in January, staring down at my feet as I confessed that I may have done something kinda dumb.
But let’s start at the beginning, the previous Saturday, when I overheard my 16-year-old son telling my wife that all the kids at his school were obsessed with hacky sack.
“I’m sorry,” I interrupted. “Did you say hacky sack? As in, um, hacky sack?”
Yes, hacky sack, the footbag game that was a stoner favorite generations ago. It had become a mania in the week since they returned from April vacation, he informed me, and it was all over social media.
“I have a hacky sack around here somewhere,” I declared, a tad too excitedly, and was just getting ready to start boring him with stories about Gen X when he cut me off.
“Yes, it’s in my pocket,” he said. “They’re sold out everywhere, so I had to find yours.”
Wait? What is happening right now?
It gets weirder
First thing that Monday morning, I was having hilarious phone conversations with educators around the state, each of them as delighted and confused as I was, trying to figure out how, overnight, Massachusetts high schools had been overrun with “sack.”
On May 7, I published a story about the phenomenon, which seems to be mostly among boys. It may have stemmed from a couple TikTok videos that circulated before school vacation, then exploded when the students returned, and immediately birthed an entire social media ecosystem, with seemingly every school having a hacky sack “team,” and even an Instagram account putting out very unofficial “official MIAA hacky sack rankings.”
That day also happened to be my 50th birthday, and more surprising than the birthday party a bunch of friends threw me that night was that I would spend the party talking to all the other parents about hacky sack.
Soon, the trend spread out of New England, where the rebirth had begun, and other publications picked up on it. Who knew I’d stumbled upon a national scoop?
The ‘flying clipper’
Now let me bore you with Gen X stories, because we often lament that our kids don’t get to have the sort of childhoods we had, before social life moved online and into their pockets. And I can’t say any of us saw a hacky sack going into their pockets next to their phones, but it is hard to picture anything being more ideal for this moment. It’s unstructured play, it’s social, it’s accessible, and it doesn’t involve a damn screen.
And not to brag, but I was pretty decent when I would hack-in to a circle in my Tevas, so as I watched my kids fumble around like newborn giraffes in their first days as sackers, I couldn’t help myself. We passed around for a few moments, I was feeling it, and so like an idiot I did a move I haven’t done in 25 years where you jump up, raise one leg, and kick underneath it with the other (Google tells me this move is called a “flying clipper.”) I landed it perfectly as my kids said “I didn’t know you could do that!” and my body said “You can’t.”
Thankfully, after the X-rays came back, I was told the artificial hip looked fine, and I just had a mild case of something called “delusion.”
“Maybe leave the hacky sack to the kids,” the surgeon told me.
Gladly. I’m just amazed they want it.
🧩 5 Across: Slightly open | ☁️ 52° Weekend warming
‘Sold something that didn’t exist’: Hampshire College students and their parents are picking up the pieces in the wake of its closure news.
Local news? Why are millions of dollars flowing through a two-person Lexington news outlet? A look at the newsroom’s unorthodox business.
Crippling America: MIT warns that the nation is hurting its future by cutting research spending by 10 percent.
Gun smugglers: A group that bought dozens of weapons in New Hampshire and trafficked them into Canada using tribal reservation corridors has been toppled. US authorities said some of those weapons were used in violent crimes in Canada.
Transcending tragedy: ALS upended their young families’ lives. These two moms are spreading awareness, and joy.
Kissing the ring: What do Cabinet secretaries, UFC fighters, and baseball mascots have in common? They all paid homage to Trump in a single week.
Logan boat crash: You read that right. A 24-year-old Andover woman has been killed and three people injured in the late-night boat crash at a pier of the international airport.
The Wampanoag were right: Researchers find evidence of at least 15 early burials at Burying Hill in Bourne. (WCAI)
‘It’s an absolute total loss’: Moozy’s Ice Cream in Belmont has been destroyed in a three-alarm fire. Also, Downtown Crossing’s Scholars bar is closing, but a new place will take its place.
Red Sox: The greatest interim manager in baseball history says interim managers have a tough job. Says Joe Morgan: “Most of the time you’re taking over a lousy team.”
To save the middle class: Massachusetts wrote America’s first wage standard in 1912. “We are well placed to write the next one,” UMass Amherst economist Arindrajit Dube writes.
Susan Collins: Is the health of the Maine senator fair game in her Senate race? asks Joan Vennochi.
Public service: A trooper’s death reminds us of what public service really means, Kevin Cullen writes.
By David Beard
🎤 Guess who’s coming to town? Our summer arts guide points out the 80 best finds of the season, from Rosalia and a post-World Cup Shakira to an SNL reunion night, “The Sleeping Beauty,” and the art of Winslow Homer.
🎻 But wait, there’s more! Alec Baldwin will narrate “Lincoln Portrait” with the BSO at Tanglewood.
📺 What about this weekend? Our streaming picks include the thriller “The Lurker,” Colin Jost’s version of “Jeopardy,” and a HBO documentary with Sandra Oh, Kumail Nanjiani, and Bowen Yang.
🍕 Get out! The weather’s going to be great. Do you want sugar pizza? Or to kick back in your choice of beer gardens? Here are the week’s most notable restaurant openings around Boston.
🐶 Love is ruff: During this week’s Blind Date, “we talked a lot about her dog, Clementine, a sheepadoodle.” Plus, in Love Letters, will this college relationship make it through summer?
💤 Better sleep: Here’s an eight-second trick to get you back to sleep in the middle of the night. (Today)
⛰️ Mount Washington: This writer first ascended to the top of the wild, gusty New Hampshire peak at age 4 — and has kept coming back. Why? “The fragrant forest, chickadees, ice cold streams, and awe-inspiring vistas,” John Dodge writes.
Thanks for reading Starting Point. Have a great weekend!
This newsletter was edited by David Beard and produced by Ryan Orlecki. Today’s hacky sack soundtrack is Two Princes, by Spin Doctors.
❓ Have a question for the team? Email us at startingpoint@globe.com.
✍🏼 If someone sent you this newsletter, you can sign up for your own copy.
📬 Delivered Monday through Friday.
Billy Baker can be reached at billy.baker@globe.com. Follow him on Instagram @billy_baker.
Massachusetts
Missing Massachusetts cat miraculously found underneath owners’ new bathtub — after disappearing for 30 hours
You’ve got to be kitten me!
A beloved feline went missing for an excruciating 30 hours in Massachusetts, only to be found in the most unlikely of places — a hole underneath a newly installed bathtub in its owners’ bathroom.
The Kirby family was renovating a bathroom in their Needham home last week when their cat, Fluffy, suddenly vanished, NBC10 Boston reported.
Assuming the snow white kitty had sneakily slipped out the front door while the construction was ongoing, the Kirby family began to fear for the worst after it failed to return home later that night.
Fluffy’s worried owners raced to Staples the following morning to print out missing cat posters and engaged a pet retrieval specialist equipped with a German shepherd to scour the Boston suburb for the cat.
Treats were also left out to lure Fluffy home — but the search came up empty.
“I thought I was never going to see him again,” Melissa Kirby told the outlet.
Thirty hours after the puzzling disappearance, things took a bizarre turn.
“I was upstairs crying and I heard a little meow,” she said.
“I thought at that point I was hallucinating.”
Melissa was left stunned when she saw a “little paw sticking out a hole” in the bathroom floor where a new bathtub had been recently installed.
Her husband, Ed Kirby, frantically called an after-hours plumber, who asked if it was an emergency.
“Yes, this is an emergency. It’s not a leak,” he desperately recalled telling the plumber.
“Our cat is trapped under our tub.”
Photos showed Fluffy peeking its little white head up from the hole it was stuck in.
In under an hour, Fluffy was rescued from the hole, unharmed and unbothered, and reunited with his family.
While it was a miracle that Fluffy wasn’t hurt, the Kirby family said they won’t be taking any more chances on their little escape artist — and plan to install an AirTag tracker on him.
“If he ever gets out again or gets trapped under another appliance,” Melissa Kirby said, “we’ll be able to locate him.”
Massachusetts
Who will take care of our older and disabled people? – The Boston Globe
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I’ve been writing for years about immigrants filling jobs that Americans don’t want. Haitians in particular have stepped into the void where the work is hard and the pay is low – cleaning, groundskeeping, preparing food, caring for elderly and developmentally disabled people.
When an influx of migrants flooded into the United States a few years ago, a number of savvy Massachusetts employers opened their doors to them. Thrive Support and Advocacy, a developmental disabilities provider in Marlborough, hired 41 newly arrived Haitians, filling all its full-time direct-care jobs for the first time in a decade.
With the Supreme Court last week siding with the Trump administration’s attempts to end Temporary Protected Status for Syrians and Haitians as part of its continued immigration crackdown, Massachusetts stands to lose 10,000 Haitian TPS holders in the workforce. A decision on Trump’s executive order to end birthright citizenship, which grants automatic citizenship to nearly everyone born on US soil, is expected today.
But it isn’t just a numbers game. Employers continually cite Haitian migrants’ loyalty, hard work, and devotion to the people they’re helping — many of them elderly. Not to mention the ripple effects of losing these valued employees as the aging population skyrockets.
“At some point, many people will be rehab patients,” Adam Scott, CEO of Hebrew SeniorLife told me. “At some point, many people will be long-term care patients. And this impacts all of them.”
When the TPS ruling is implemented, 10,000 Massachusetts residents will be out of a job and expected to leave the country. But many of them have nowhere to go. A pharmacy tech I’ve been talking to over the past few months knew this day was coming, and she has a detailed plan in place that will allow her 14-year-old US-born son, who has autism, to stay. But she has no plan for herself. She can’t go back to Haiti, where she was kidnapped by gangs as a teenager. So she’s hoping to keep working until her employer tells her she has to go.
To where, though, she doesn’t know.
—
Read: Who will care for the elderly and developmentally disabled?
Also: More than 100 Venezuelans deported from the United States just hours before the deadly earthquakes are missing. Seven children were among the group, which was taken to a hotel that was destroyed in the quake. (AP)
🧩 6 Across: Bookstore category | ☀️ 88° Hotter Wed.
World Cup: Can the US soccer team beat a European national team for the first time in 11 matches and make it into the Group of 16? We’ll know tomorrow night. In a thrilling upset, Paraguay sent four-time champion Germany home at Foxborough.
Five in a row: Don’t get too excited yet, but the Red Sox followed their four-game sweep of the Yankees with a 6-3 victory over the Nationals last night. They were led by Wilton Contreras, who has been struggling with the news of the deadly earthquakes in his native Venezuela.
Cannabis rollback: If Mass. voters repeal marijuana legalization, would that put you in danger of being arrested? We answer your questions here.
Heat wave: An Extreme Heat Watch has been declared for Wednesday through the Fourth of July. Here’s how hot it will get.
Wellesley killing: The 24-year-old man charged with fatally stabbing his father had suffered serious mental health issues and battled “to contain his demons,” family friends say.
Hiya, neighbor! Cambridge wants to build “social housing.” What is it?
What now? More people are surviving cancer than ever before. Now health providers are helping people navigate the next step.
Duck Boat accident: Questions about equipment quality and decision-making are being raised about the accident Saturday that injured 11 people when the craft flipped in East Cambridge.
Beaches, shellfish areas closed: A sewer line break in Haverhill dumped millions of gallons of wasterwater into the Merrimack River.
He’s No. 1: Yes, but what made AJ Dybantsa the NBA’s top pick? He’s the exact type of player NBA teams are looking for.
By David Beard

📺 Best TV so far: A whip-smart Italian import. A New England horror comedy. A gay Lutheran minister and his sister stumble across a criminal. Check out our faves.
🏰 Home of the Week: Hail, Victorian! Brookline’s regal Webber-Bouve Mansion has hit the market for $4.3 million. Take a peek. Plus, see the 1976 home for sale that has a Revolutionary War touch.
🍕 Riverside eats: Years in the making, the $24 million Esplanade pavilion project with a café nears the finish line.
🎻 Music as a focusing tool: The jury is out on whether music helps you study or work better or takes away focus, However, instrumental music may help more than those jumping lyrical workout tunes. (The Conversation)
🏴 Tartan adventure: A Globe reporter went to Scotland to find family history, Highland culture — and a wee dram of whisky.
Thanks for reading Starting Point.
This newsletter was edited by David Beard and produced by Ryan Orlecki.
❓ Have a question for the team? Email us at startingpoint@globe.com.
✍🏼 If someone sent you this newsletter, you can sign up for your own copy.
📬 Delivered Monday through Friday.
Katie Johnston can be reached at katie.johnston@globe.com. Follow her @ktkjohnston.
Massachusetts
Millions of gallons of wastewater discharged into Merrimack River due to broken pipe
Approximately eight million gallons of wastewater are currently being discharged into the river per day.
HAVERHILL, Mass. (WWLP) – Those traveling for the Fourth of July weekend are being advised of a wastewater pipe break on the Merrimack River.
The Massachusetts Environmental Police stated that over the weekend, a major wastewater pipe in Haverhill broke, releasing millions of gallons of sewage into the river. The broken pipe was carrying wastewater from the main pumping station to the treatment plant.
Police estimate that approximately eight million gallons of wastewater are currently being discharged into the river per day.
At this time, fishing in the river is not prohibited, and the estuaries and beaches remain open. However, the information is being released to the public to help community members be aware of current conditions and use caution.
To access more information on water quality testing results, you can visit the official DPH website. Updates will be provided as more information becomes available.
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